Dayton Daily News

Want a baby? Some women don’t know

- Margot Sanger Katz and Claire Cain Miller ©2019 The New York Times

For decades, researcher­s and physicians tended to think about pregnancie­s as planned or unplanned. But new data reveals that for a significan­t group of women, their feelings don’t neatly fit into one category. As many as one-fifth of women who become pregnant aren’t sure whether they want a baby.

This fact may reshape how doctors and policymake­rs think about family planning. For women who are unsure, it doesn’t seem enough for physicians to counsel them on pregnancy prevention or prenatal care.

“In the past we thought of it as binary, you want to be pregnant or not, so you need contracept­ion or a prenatal vitamin,” said Maria Isabel Rodriguez, an obstetrici­an-gynecologi­st at Oregon Health and Science University whose research focuses on family planning and contracept­ive policy. “But it’s more of a continuum.”

The new data comes from a recent change in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s big survey of new mothers, now allowing them to answer a question about their pregnancy desires by saying “I wasn’t sure.” It shows that some women want to avoid making a decision about becoming pregnant, or have strong but mixed feelings about it. A new analysis of the 2014 results from the Guttmacher Institute combined these results with data from abortion providers. It found that in 9 percent to 19 percent of pregnancie­s, the woman “wasn’t sure” what she wanted at the time.

Other research has asked people whether they want to have children, or have more children. An analysis of 33 studies of fertility intentions in developed countries found that roughly one-fifth to one-third of women said they weren’t sure. And in a poll of women and men ages 20 to 45 in the United States, by The New York Times and Morning Consult, 16 percent of people who were not parents said they weren’t sure whether they wanted to be.

Women ambivalent about pregnancy tend to be younger, wrestling with financial strains and life plans, or older, nearing the end of their fertile years. They are more likely to be black than white. They are more likely to already have at least two children, said Isaac Maddow-Zimmet, a senior research associate at Guttmacher.

The research confirms that many unplanned pregnancie­s can neverthele­ss become wanted as women’s feelings about pregnancy evolve.

Kristin Jennings had been told she might be infertile, and had decided that children weren’t for her. But a year ago, when she and her husband felt financiall­y secure, they decided to see what would happen if she stopped taking contracept­ion.

“It was one of those weird moments where I know if we were actually trying and it was something we really wanted and were really hoping for, I would have been really excited,” she said. “But when I was looking down, I was like, ‘Oh, this is unexpected.’”

A few weeks later, Jennings, 33, was offered a big promotion at her job at an industrial company in suburban Cleveland. “Had I not gotten pregnant that month specifical­ly, I probably would have told my husband: ‘I can’t do this. I need to focus on my job.’”

Jennings’ mixed feelings have turned to enthusiasm over time. She loves her 11-month-old daughter, Jade, and is thriving in her new job. But she said that she felt lonely in her ambivalenc­e at the time. “I’m surrounded by women who just ache to be mothers,” she said. “I don’t know anybody with my situation.”

Sociologis­ts have known from decades of field work that women’s attitudes toward pregnancy and motherhood can be a jumble. Women may be influenced by social norms about the ideal circumstan­ces for motherhood or conflicts between the competing pulls of caregiving and work.

Women face even more trade-offs today because they have more choices, including higher education and a career, and young people are delaying marriage and childbeari­ng. Many are also anxious about affording children in part because of high housing costs and record student debt. And birth control has become more accessible, affordable and effective.

“I see women of lots of different background­s who very much want a child, but don’t feel they’re at that ideal place in their life ... to want one,” Rodriguez said.

The best care for an ambivalent woman might be a form of birth control that is more easily reversible. When women say they’re unsure, Rodriguez talks to them about things like taking folic acid for fetal health, just in case, and about options for emergency contracept­ion.

The new evidence, she said, shows the importance of providing continuous medical care to women of reproducti­ve age, not just when they’re pregnant.

 ?? MADDIE MCGARVEY / NEW YORK TIMES ?? Kristin Jennings, 33, gets a rare office visit from her 11-month-old daughter, Jade — a baby she didn’t know she wanted. New data reveals more women share Jennings’ ambivalenc­e about pregnancy.
MADDIE MCGARVEY / NEW YORK TIMES Kristin Jennings, 33, gets a rare office visit from her 11-month-old daughter, Jade — a baby she didn’t know she wanted. New data reveals more women share Jennings’ ambivalenc­e about pregnancy.

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